Japan

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Yuko-san used her relationship with a monk from the Rinno-ji Temple to secure a beautiful wood-floored hall for BDC’s use for the workshops as well as rehearsals. BDC was distressed to see that YTDC normally rehearses in a studio tucked away on salvage land under a raised highway.

One of the strongest elements of Dancing to Connect Japan & U.S. was undoubtedly the element of cross-cultural collaboration. This bilateral internationalism was set in sharp relief throughout the tour but especially during BDC’s 8 days in Sendai in which BDC partnered with the Northeast region’s leading modern dance company, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company.

Yuko Takahashi is a choreographer and veteran teacher who has trained a generation of modern dancers in Sendai, capital of Miyagi Prefecture. Respected by the dance critics and taste-makers of Tokyo, several of whom attended the final performance at Tokyo Electron Hall, Takahashi fills large theaters several times a year for home seasons in Sendai.

The link between Takahashi and Battery Dance Company was forged by Mayuna Shimizu, a talented dancer and choreographer who moved from Japan to New York a decade ago to study with the Joffrey Ballet. Shimizu is also from the Northeastern region of Japan and met Takahashi through mutual colleagues. She became a member of Battery Dance Company in 2007 and has performed and taught in NYC, Asia, Middle East and Europe with BDC. Mayuna proposed Takahashi’s help in hosting BDC in Sendai, and promoted the idea of including the Yuko Takahashi Dance Company in BDC’s Downtown Dance Festival in NYC. Support from the Japan-US Friendship Commission and the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo was forthcoming and permitted BDC to plan an 18-day program in Japan. Similarly, a travel grant from the Japan Foundation permitted Yuko Takahashi Dance Company to perform twice in BDC’s Downtown Dance Festival a few days after the Company’s return to the U.S.

The following day, an orientation and sight-seeing tour was arranged, giving the dancers from both companies a chance to bond, transcending the language barrier.

Over the next week, BDC teaching artists taught a series of 6 master classes that were attended by members of YTDC, students from Yuko-san’s school and other dancers from the community.

The grand finale of BDC’s Sendai stay was a performance at the magnificent 1,500-seat Tokyo Electron Hall. Having had no role to play in promoting the performance and hearing nothing in advance from Yuko’s staff about ticket sales, we were anxious that such a big hall would feel empty if just a few hundred people showed up. Not only that, but we learned that there had been a huge national modern dance convention in Japan just days before the show and this increased our concern that the audience for our show would be scant. Our worries were put to rest as we returned to the theater, after coffee and snacks, and saw a long line snaking out onto the sidewalk from the box office! Much to our delight, the theater was nearly full when the performance began.

Complementing works by YTDC, BDC presented its newest production, “Voice Hearers”, whose scenery is coincidentally reminiscent of Japanese shoji screens. Audience response was powerful and vociferous, approaching the approbation accorded the Shamizen maestro who accompanied one of Yuko-san’s works. This was one of the fascinating realizations BDC experienced in Japan – that dance fails to rouse audiences to the pitch that even a solo musician can count on.

On Friday, August 6, we had the honor of presenting a site-specific performance at the Hyogo Prefectural Art Museum, organized by Peace Forest NPO. The Museum itself, designed by Pritzker Award-winning architect Tadao Endo, was the venue, with its grand staircase, ramps and terraces facing the Kobe Riverfront serving as the very unusual stage. Our dancers had taught workshops on the 5th and 6th, with 50 Japanese dancers taking part. 32 of the dancers opted to participate in our performance piece entitled “Peace Phoenix”, subtitled ‘The Day After’. This title was inspired by the fact that our performance took place on Hiroshima Day. By coincidence, the Obama Administration sent US Ambassador Roos to Hiroshima yesterday — the first time that a US diplomat had attended the memorial service there.

Our event was enlivened by the music created and performed for us by Japanese jazz/rock percussionist Tetsuya Kajiwara and Taiko drummer and shamisen player Nobuhito Tomo-oka. They were amazingly resourceful and flexible given the complexity of our scenario and the brief time allowed to prepare (and the brutal heat during our afternoon outdoor rehearsals!) We were amazed to find out that our performance was the first such event ever produced by the Museum. We were very grateful to Michiko Abe, Professor Akira Fukuchi and the dedicated team of volunteers from Peace Forest who had the imagination to conceive of this event and the stamina to counteract all of the bureaucratic barriers and reversals that occurred in the planning phase.

Following the two-day residency at the Hyogo Prefectural Museum of Art in Kobe, BDC teaching artists fanned out to 4 different locations to lead Dancing to Connect workshops with groups of 20 – 30 students each. Mayuna traveled to Shikokuchūō in Ehime Prefecture where she worked with dance students from a local ballet school. Bafana went to Nara, to work with the dance students at Tenri University. Robin and Sean commuted to Takarazuka to work with a large group of students at Takarazuka High School, and Carmen worked with dance students of Masaka Toka, a well-respected dance teacher in Ashiya City. The workshops went on for 4 days with intensive schedules of 9 – 12 noon and 1 – 4 p.m. each day. Jonathan Hollander, artistic director, visited each workshop, traveling from one venue to the next, encouraging the students and supporting the teaching artists. The dance pieces that resulted were unique – each in its own way -- and as emotionally and thematically powerful as they were poetic and riveting to watch.

Comparing the Japanese experience of DtC with others that BDC has led (in NYC, Germany, Taiwan and elsewhere), the general feeling was that the Japanese participants who had self-selected, came to the experience with far more dance training than usual. They were rich with imaginative ideas and worked very well in groups, with certain individuals standing out for their special abilities or quality. While in Shikokuo, Jonathan Hollander had met with the Mayor, an ambitious young politician with big aspirations for the building of a new performing arts center that he hopes will be a major attraction for the region. The Mayor told Hollander, “it is my impression that Japanese youth are short on creativity.” Hollander replied that perhaps it is the lack of opportunity to exercise and display their creativity, rather than an innate short-coming – based on the evidence of the DtC workshops.

Similar to the experience in Sendai, BDC was very anxious about the technical elements of such an elaborate joint performance including two Japanese dance companies, four student DtC groups and BDC itself on one evening. Close cooperation between BDC’s technical director David Bengali and local dance producer Masako Toka (who had been the dean of dance at Mukogawa Women’s University in 2006 when BDC last visited), ensured great results. Perhaps the novelty of having an American dance company performing coupled with the strong participation by local dancers accounted for the nearly full-house! Acting Consul General Gregory Kay gave a warm welcome (in Japanese) to the audience on behalf of the US Consulate General Osaka, and Jonathan Hollander delivered a short speech praising the Japanese dancers and thanking all of the participants and sponsors for their support. Otherwise, the evening was entirely given over to the dancers and the audience responded with tremendous appreciation.

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Please see Sendai for more information on Battery Dance Companies 2010 tour to Japan.

Japan, 2010

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Please see Sendai for more information on Battery Dance Companies 2010 tour to Japan.

Japan, 2010

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in
July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Please see Sendai for more information on Battery Dance Companies 2010 tour to Japan.

Japan, 2010

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in
July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Please see Sendai for more information on Battery Dance Companies 2010 tour to Japan.

Japan, 2010

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in
July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Please see Sendai for more information on Battery Dance Companies 2010 tour to Japan.

Japan, 2010

Battery Dance Company and Dancing to Connect worked and performed here in
July 2010.

The eight-member troupe performed and taught in Sendai and throughout the Kansai Region on an 18-day tour co-sponsored by the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission, U.S. Embassy Tokyo, Yuko Takahashi Dance Company and Peace Forest.

Please see Sendai for more information on Battery Dance Companies 2010 tour to Japan.

Social Issues: Japan is a country with a very different set of social norms from the U.S. Forget casual! It is really important to educate oneself beforehand -- a small gaffe could cause a major set-back in building partnerships and forwarding your project. For example, the presenting of business cards is an almost ceremonial act. There is much literature on the www that will give a detailed, step-by-step description; but for dancers and choreographers, it won’t seem difficult o master. Hold the card delicately with both hands and present it (with the card positioned in such a way that your counterpart can read it) accompanied by a slight bow. When receiving a card, take it gently and examine it with interest and approval. My advice: take a Japanese friend aside before you visit Japan and ask for lessons in decorum. This will serve you very well!

Cultural Adaptation

Bureaucracy: Spontaneity is a concept that doesn’t go well with Japanese organizers. In fact, I was stunned to realize that the idea of suitable planning time for a project in Japan if two years at the minimum. Theaters, even smaller ones, seem to be booked this far in advance.

Take-away

Maintain a synergistic approach: bring your partners together; build secondary events to add to your main one; include social activities, formal or informal, in your program plans. Our event at the Hilton in Osaka proved to be a very important opportunity to have our Japanese hosts and the hotel manager meet and greet and generate a feel-good atmosphere around the program.

A small dinner reception was held at the Hilton Osaka, hosted and attended by members of Peace Forest, NPO, the Company’s hospitality sponsor; Mr. Schwander, GM of the hotel, and other dignitaries and dancers.

The United States’ stature as a world center of the performing arts was on brilliant display by the Battery Dance Company. Implicit in the many workshops offered was the US’s similar role in world arts education; there was no doubt in the minds of the dance participants that they were seeing and participating in the top level of dance. This American dance company’s identification with the world peace movement also offered the Japanese public a more nuanced view of the US, this in contrast to a spate of recent of US-connected issues headlining in Japan, including US military base relocation within Japan and concerns with Japan’s participation in Middle Eastern peacekeeping. The Battery Dance Company’s Kansai tour was a large-scale and complex undertaking, but yielded commensurately positive results!
-U.S. Consulate General, Osaka

BDC members all attended an afternoon workshop for over 100 high school and college-age dance students from Kansai area institutions including Tenhy University in Nara, Ashiya Performing Arts Academy and Mukogawa University in Takarazuka.

To commence, Jonathan Hollander gave introductory commentary and presented all members of the company.

Sean Scantlebury taught a hip- hop master classes for over 50 students who picked up the material proficiently and enthusiastically. The atmosphere was fun and the students were extremely cooperative and friendly.

Jeanene Winston and Lydia Tetzlaff gave two successive master classes in modern dance. The students ranged from intermediate to advanced levels and followed the teachers’ instructions with
relative ease.

A small reception was held afterwards and gifts were presented to each of the BDC members

U.S. Department of State, Office of Public Diplomacy, East Asia Pacific Region

U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs

U.S. Embassy, Tokyo

Peace Forest (NGO) Japan

Venues

International House Tokyo (Performance)

Chacott Shibuya (Master Class)

Master Class at Chacott Shibuya

Six modern dance master classes were conducted in Battery Dance Company “style.” Warm ups were led by Bafana Matea, followed by repertoire segments taught by Stevan Novakovich, Adele LeRoi Nickel, Lydia Tetzlaff and Jeanene Winston, emphasizing excerpts from the BDC repertoire. The studio was filled to capacity with 25 students and 3 Japanese dance teachers who observed.

Japanese dance teachers expressed their hope that BDC would return for performances and extended workshops in Japan. The students did a superb job of picking up the new and challenging material and showed enthusiasm throughout.

Performance at International House Tokyo

With its NGO host Peace Forest and in cooperation with International House Tokyo, BDC organized a performance that included solos by four of its dancers as well as solos by two Japanese guest dancers, with a group work by BDC as the finale. A panel discussion and dialogue with the audience followed the performance. This event was the inaugural performance in International House’s newly rebuilt facilities. Although the hall capacity was mentioned as 80, Peace Forest managed to squeeze in 100 people.

Solo performances were presented by BDC Company members Stevan Novakovich, Lydia T etzlaff, Bafana Solomon Matea and Sean Scantlebury; solo performances by Japanese guest artists Mayuna Shimizu and Megumi Kamimura brought a bilateral touch to the evening.
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An ensemble presentation by BDC of “Notebooks” concluded the performance aspect of the program, followed Fellow Daisuke Muto, joined by panelists Kamimura, Shimizu, Hollander and BDC company member and dance critic (The Village Voice) Adele LeRoi Nickel. The panelists discussed their perceptions of contemporary dance in New York and Tokyo and answered questions posed by audience members.